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Shulie

Elisabeth Subrin

1997 00:36:38 United StatesEnglishB&W and ColorMono4:3Video

Description

"A cinematic doppelganger without precedent, Elisabeth Subrin’s Shulie uncannily and systemically bends time and cinematic code alike, projecting the viewer 30 years into the past to rediscover a woman out of time and a time out of joint — and in Subrin’s words, "to investigate the mythos and residue of the late '60s." Staging an extended act of homage, as well as a playful, provocative confounding of filmic propriety, Subrin and her creative collaborator Kim Soss resurrect a little-known 1967 documentary portrait of a young Chicago art student, who a few years later would become a notable figure in Second Wave feminism, and author of the radical 1970 manifesto, The Dialectic of Sex: The Case for Feminist Revolution. Reflecting on her life and times, Shulie functions as a prism for refracting questions of gender, race and class that resonate in our era as in hers, while through painstaking mediation, Subrin makes manifest the eternal return of film."

— Mark MacElhatten and Gavin Smith, Co-curators, Views from the Avant Garde, New York Film Festival, 1997

“It’s a fascinating tape. Not a clone in the end, but a brilliant rethinking of history... Subrin has created a document within a document that makes us remember what we didn’t know, then makes us realize all over again how much we’ve lost. Subrin turns the past into an amusement park attraction for the present, strapping us playfully into our seats, and in the process gives us a glimpse of the video of the future.”

— B. Ruby Rich, San Francisco Bay Guardian

This title is also available on Elisabeth Subrin Videoworks.

 

About Elisabeth Subrin

Elisabeth Subrin is an artist and filmmaker who engages a wide range of genres, forms and contexts to create conceptually driven projects in video, film, photography and installation. Her work seeks intersections between history and subjectivity, investigating the nature and poetics of psychological "disorder," the legacy of feminism, and the impact of recent social and political history on contemporary life and consciousness.
 
In 2010, Sue Scott Gallery in New York mounted a retrospective of her work, Elisabeth Subrin: Her Compulsion To Repeat, including her 2010 video installation Lost Tribes and Promised Lands, her 2008 two-channel film projection Sweet Ruin, and  selected films, videos, and large-scale photographic stills from 1990-2010. Lost Tribes and Promised Lands has since been presented at MoMA/PS1's 2010 Greater New York exhibition, the Contemporary Art Museum of Val De Marne, Paris and at The Mattress Factory Art Museum in Pittsburgh. Her work was also recently the subject of solo exhibitions at the Jewish Museum, New York, and at the 2011 VOLTA NY.  
 
Subrin’s award-winning films and videos have screened and exhibited widely in the US and abroad, including solo shows at the Museum of Modern Art, the Vienna International Film Festival, the Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, Harvard Film Archives, the San Francisco Cinematheque, and in group shows, festivals and museums internationally, including the Whitney Biennial, the Guggenheim Museum, the Walker Art Center, the Wexner Center for the Arts, the New York Film Festival, and the Rotterdam International Film Festival.
 
She has received grants and fellowships from the Rockefeller, Guggenheim, Annenberg, and the Creative Capital Foundations, and has been a fellow at the MacDowell Colony and Yaddo. She participated in the Sundance Institute Screenwriting and Directing Fellowships with her feature film project, in development with Forensic Films. She has received film commissions from the MacDowell Colony and the Danish Arts Council for recent projects, The Caretakers (2006) and Sweet Ruin (2008).
 
Subrin has taught at Cooper Union, Amherst College, the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, the Graduate Program at Virginia Commonwealth University, Bennington College, Yale University School of Art, and in the Department of Visual and Environmental Studies at Harvard University. She is currently Assistant Professor of Film and Media Art at Temple University, and lives in Brooklyn, New York.